Mitt Romney won the first debate; virtual every snap poll
and snap pundit agrees on this point. As the 90-minute debate wore on,
the Republican challenger's odds of unseating President Barack Obama
rose about 5 percentage points to 31 percent in the Signal's election
model, driven by gamblers who dumped the president's stock during and
immediately after the faceoff.
We are unlikely to see as large a movement in the polls, at least
right away. By themselves, debates seldom move polls precipitously.
Political scientist Thomas Holbrook
has found that the average change over the last 16 presidential debates
is less than 1 percentage point. The maximum change was 2.26 percentage
points before and after the first debate in 2004, when John Kerry came
out swinging against George W. Bush.Sources: Betfair, Intrade and IEM
But debates have a reach beyond the immediate bump or slide in the polls as they seep into the narrative and offer up ammunition for campaign commercials. With nearly two full weeks until the next presidential debate, the results of this one have a long time to hang around. Romney's solid performance can lead to new donations that, in turn, lead to better poll numbers in the following weeks.
In this way, debates are the opposite of conventions, in which we advise you to ignore the bump in the polls since it inevitably fades. After debates, we advise you to ignore the nonbump in the polls, because it may grow.
Our prediction moved in Romney's favor because, with the wind in his sails, he is slightly more likely to be able to close the 4.5 percentage point gap in the polls over the next few weeks. That remains, so to speak, an uphill sail
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